It sure is looking like another red day, pre-market is down, plus I am not liking this "no news", "layoffs" and "futures markets falling" to turn BB green, looks ugly for a lot of stocks today.

If you've followed this stock at all, you'll see that PM has very little relevance to the days performance. Have to wait for the first 10 minutes of active trading to get an idea of where the day will head.

I am sorry to say it would have to be Apple or Android as I do not fear that they will still be around 2-3 years from now. I can not say the same for BB.

We all have our own way of doing things, but I am curious why you would worry about this more than security and functionality. Our handset cycle is less than 2 years, and even if BB goes bankrupt right now, it would have virtually no effects on our usage of the BB10 handsets, if it does disrupt, there would be minimal costs in getting the carriers to ship their best replacements over. We did use iPhones (4 and 4S) as well after the infamous BB blackout, but iPhones are no replacement for BB. BB10 is far superior in every way (except for refinement). And by Android, you probably meant Samsung since other manufacturers' futures are also uncertain.

We really do disagree. I do not see BB as more secure than an iPhone. Many of my people also use the iPad in the field and they work quite well together. Nothing is really secure anymore. Anyone thinking so is just fooling themselves.

I will never get over TH outright misleading the stockholders before the last ER. I bet he sells at any cost before the next one! Sales are in the toilet.

In the mean time we are having another BBRY "buying opportunity" today

BlackBerry lower; Bloomberg, analysts speculate breakup on tap 10:35 AM
BlackBerry (BBRY -2.6%) is giving up some more of its recent gains after Bloomberg and contacted analysts suggest the company's phone business is "essentially worthless," and that BlackBerry's other assets (patents, BES, the network operations centers, cash/investments) are only worth ~$5B (current market cap is $5.3B).
Fund manager Brian Huen: "Nobody is interested in buying the entire entity. I think they are now in the phase of saying, We will do anything to maximize value, including breaking up the company.'"
Canaccord: "The most logical acquirer of BlackBerry would likely attempt to transition BlackBerrys subscriber base to its own competing smartphone products" BMO thinks it would cost a buyer $800M to shut down BlackBerry's phone unit.
However, much of the buyout speculation thus far hasn't involved a rival OEM, but Prem Watsa and his reported efforts to talk to both P-E firms and "industry players" about a bid.
Pac Crest recently suggested BlackBerry's purchase commitments will limit the size of any bid.

They quote all the bear analysts.. absolutely nothing new there. ...full of typos too.

If I was a wise CEO I would move the 5000 employees to Blackberry for a period of time until either they (Blackberry) get better or others platform can boost theirs securities. I rather be safe now until I do not have others choice

Originally Posted by greggebhardt

If I were a "wise" CEO and was looking at moving 5000 employees to a new platform, I would have to think long and hard before I would move them to Blackberry. Maybe if they were sold and the new buyer was putting billions into breathing new life into the long term survival I would consider. I just can not see that happening.

Just wanted to throw this out there… I’m still holding my shares and still support Blackberry, so my questioning is due to my lack of experience investing in a company that went from certain success to alternatives of going private or buyout in a very short period of time. I’m looking at both sides of the issue right now, that’s all. Hope everyone is having a good day.